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. t-mr'wmmmmmtmit mk9Gpiq'W)!nWrpig"g!wptppwy;bank robbery. Police refuse to tellname.J. L. Jacobs, efficiency engineer ofCivil Service Commission, advisescity to issue garbage bonds.George Martin, Lafayette Hotel,assaulted and thrown into-jiver atRandolph st. Rescued.Lillian Gray, 25, sent to Bridewellfor 40 days by Judge- Scully at h'erown request. Morphine.o o"OTHER BOSSES," SAYS SULZERNew York, Nov. 1. Gov. Sulzer,in a special interview, declares thathe is not the only governor whomight tell such a story as has heldNew York up to shame before theentire country, but the difference between he and other governors is thathe refused to submit."Chief Murphy is not the only boss,although "he may represent the worsttype," Sulzer stated. "There are other governors who might tell of orders being received from the head of'invisible government.' There haveprobably been other 'Gaffney or warmessages. The difference is that Irefused to submit, and the threatsthat I would be ruined were orderedmade good."Next Tuesday the answer will begiven to Mr. Murphy's recall. Thequestion is whether Murphy has thepower to recall a governor becausehe refused to be a "rubber stamp, orwhether the people may recall Murphy from his domination of the cityand state politics. The questionwhich vthe people may answer forthemselves is whether I would havebeen removed from office had the recall rested with them."ABOUT HIGH BUILDINGSNew York, Nov. 1. Ten years agothe Park Row building was NewYork's tallest business structure. Itshighest point was 382 feet above thestreet. vA new epoch in skyscrapers wasmarked by the Singer building, 612feet hieh. Then came the Metropolitan Life, with its white tower ex-1tending upward 700 feet, and lastlythe beautiful, cathedral-like Woolworth building, which placed the altitude mark at 750 feet.Now there is to come a greaterthan any of these. The Pan-Amerj-canStates Association building, plansfor which have been completed, willhave 56 stories as compared withthe Woolworth building's 52 and itsdome will be 901 feet above the pavemen. As may be guessed from its name,the building is to be erected by an,association formed to unite and promote the commercial interests of theNorth and South American republics.Its 1,500,000 feet of floor space willbe devoted to offices of Pan-Americantrade associations, displays of theproducts of all the countries of thewestern hemisphere, quarters of diplomatic and commercial representatives of the various nations, clubrooms, banquet halls, and one of thelargest libraries in existence.The state dining room -there willbe five others) w4lL-contain a tablewhich will seat 1,500 persons. It willbe an apartment of great splendor,surrounded by mezzanine galleries.The building will occupy an entireblock. Each of 34 floors will have aspace of 35,000 square feet. Ahoyethese will rise the remainder of thebuilding, in the form of a Spanishtower, with minarets and domes ofgreen and gold and red.The entire building will house comfortably 100,000 persons the popu-lation of a pretty fair-sized city,There will be five entrances, each)guarded by five massive columns, andleading into a magnificent rotunda..The floor will be a mosaic representing the Americas.Three sites are under consideration Seventh avenue, facing thePennsylvania station; Columbus Circle, facing Central Park, and Lexington avenue, near 42d x street Thebuilding will cost $11,000,000. Thearchitect is Francis H. Kimball, whodesigned the Metropolitan LiJ